NASA is resetting expectations for one of its most ambitious missions. The space agency is now targeting March for the earliest possible launch of Artemis II, the historic lunar mission that will send four astronauts into deep space for the first time in more than five decades. The delay comes after a crucial wet dress rehearsal exposed technical issues that need addressing before the rocket and crew can actually fly.
The mission was originally expected to lift off on February 8th. But after NASA completed its dress rehearsal test early Tuesday morning a full systems simulation that pushed the Space Launch System rocket through a simulated countdown the agency decided more work was necessary. Cold weather during the test contributed to a late start, and once systems began running, hydrogen leak issues emerged that echoed a problem the rocket had experienced during earlier tests in 2022.
“With more than three years between SLS launches, we fully anticipated encountering challenges,” NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said. “That is precisely why we conduct a wet dress rehearsal. These tests are designed to surface issues before flight and set up launch day with the highest probability of success.”
The delay represents a calculated decision to prioritize safety and reliability over schedule. For a mission this ambitious sending humans farther from Earth than they’ve ever traveled rushing to a launch date based on calendar expectations makes no sense. The problems discovered during the rehearsal need to be understood and resolved before four astronauts strap into that rocket.
The Challenges of Extreme Cold and Hydrogen’s Fickleness
The wet dress rehearsal is as intense as its name suggests. Launch controllers filled the Space Launch System with more than 700,000 gallons of super-chilled propellants and walked through a complete countdown simulation. It’s the first opportunity for the integrated Artemis II stack the rocket and spacecraft working together as a complete system to demonstrate readiness on the actual launchpad.
The hydrogen leak issues that emerged represent NASA’s biggest technical challenge. Liquified hydrogen, kept at minus 423 degrees Fahrenheit, is notoriously difficult to manage. Its tiny molecular structure makes the substance incredibly hard to contain, which means even small imperfections in connections, valves, or seals can cause problems.
“The rocket is pretty limited in terms of how much realism we can put into the test,” said John Honeycutt, chair of the Artemis II Mission Management Team. “We try to test like we fly, but this interface is very complex. This one caught us off guard.”
The hydrogen leak appeared just hours into Monday’s test the same type of problem that had plagued the rocket during earlier dress rehearsals for the uncrewed Artemis I flight in 2022. NASA learned from those previous challenges and implemented an aggressive testing approach this time, but the hydrogen interface remains tricky enough to require careful attention.
When One Problem Leads to Another
The hydrogen leak wasn’t the only issue the rehearsal uncovered. After troubleshooting the fuel leak and getting the rocket into “replenish mode” where it’s loaded with just enough fuel to top off boiling propellant a new problem emerged. A closeout crew, responsible for closing the hatch on the astronauts’ spacecraft, encountered a valve that had been inadvertently vented. Their work took longer than expected, pushing the simulated launch time beyond the intended four-hour window that had opened at 9 p.m. ET Monday.
As the launch window approached closure, NASA launch controllers were counting down to approximately five minutes before the ground launch sequencer automatically stopped the countdown. At that point, another spike in the liquid hydrogen leak rate triggered the halt.
These aren’t failures they’re discoveries. Each issue identified during rehearsal is an issue that won’t surprise launch teams when actual flight day arrives. That’s precisely the point of wet dress rehearsals: to let the rocket and ground systems “talk” to the team before humans are aboard.
“We got a chance for the rocket to talk to us, and it did just that,” Honeycutt said.
The Path Forward and the Crew’s Mission
NASA said the next wet dress rehearsal will target the remaining objectives that occur after the five-minute countdown mark the portion of the test that didn’t complete during Monday’s simulation. Teams will fully review all data, mitigate each identified issue, and return to testing before setting an official target launch date within the March window.
NASA previously identified March 6, 7, 8, 9, and 11 as potential launch dates. When Artemis II finally launches, it will send four astronauts on a 10-day journey: NASA’s Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, and Christina Koch, along with Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen. The mission could set a new record for the farthest distance humans have ever traveled from Earth.
For now, the crew has been released from quarantine and will re-enter it about two weeks before the next targeted launch date. NASA leadership emphasized constant communication with the crew throughout the rehearsal and its aftermath, ensuring they understand the reasoning behind the delay.
The Artemis II mission represents NASA’s commitment to returning humans to the moon and launching the next era of deep space exploration. Rushing that mission to meet an arbitrary calendar date would betray the careful engineering and preparation that makes such missions possible. The March delay isn’t a setback it’s NASA demonstrating that it takes the complexity of spaceflight seriously.

